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World Congress on Probation, London 2013 Civil Participation in Probation in a Japanese Perspective - How Japanese VPO System Functions for the High-Risk Offenders Rehabilitation and Criminogenic Needs of the Socially Excluded Recidivists - Evidence -based Japanese Perspective -
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World Congress on Probation, London 2013 Civil Participation in Probation in a Japanese Perspective - How Japanese VPO System Functions for the High-Risk Offenders Rehabilitation and Criminogenic Needs of the Socially Excluded Recidivists - Evidence-based Japanese Perspective - Kayo Konagai Professor, Faculty of Social Development, Rikkyo University, Japan
1 Purpose of this Presentation • In Japan crime rate as well as recidivism rate is very low. But recidivism rate by repeated offenders is increasing. • In such impetus 30% of all offenders commit 60 % of all offences. There exists some group of offenders whose rehabilitation is extremely difficult. • I conducted quantitative and quantity researches for offenders, whose crime tendency is advanced or who committed serious offence in order to search for risk factors as well as rehabilitation factors. Then I consider about how to facilitate offenders’ rehabilitation and re-integration into the community through the Japanese collaboration system of a Probation Officer and a Volunteer Probation Officer.
2 Qualitative Research – Survey (1)Purpose To search for level of awareness and insights for his life and himself, responsibility for the offence, task and needs of the offender, who is under parole and probation supervision.
(2)Method • To conduct a questionnaire survey for 130 adult parolees/probationers and their assigned VPOs, whose relationship had been continued for more than 6 months. Offenders had not committed any further offence after the sentence. • Information about offenders were also picked up from the sentencing documents and their case files. • Cognitive gap between the offender and VPO, in terms of an offender’s crime causes, problems of life, offender’s rehabilitation needs , is also used as data. • All information was analyzed by “Hayashi's Quantification Methods Type III” (almost same as Correspondence Analysis).
(3)Questionnaire 1) For Parolees and Probationers Cause of Offence, Problem in Life at the Time of Offence, Recognition of Damage and Impact for Victim, Feeling for the Sentence, Methods of how to take Responsibility for the Offence, Recognition of his Risky Situation for Recidivism, Deterrence Factors of Recidivism at present, Difficulty and Worries in their daily lives, Rehabilitation Needs, etc.
2) Information from Sentencing Documents and Offender’s Case File Age, Occupation, Housing, Guarantor or Guardian, Criminal History, Details of Offence, Contents of Sentence, Life History, Mental and Physical Health, Family Relationship, Living Environment, Relationship with Others, Life Plan, Compensation for Victims, etc.
3) Questionnaire for VPOs Treatment Plan and Policy for this offender, Evaluation for Offender’s Attitude for VPO, Problems of Offender’s Life, Problems of Offender’s Personality and Behavior, Rehabilitation Support from Family, Deterrence Factors of Recidivism, Needs for Support and Guidance, etc.
* Who are VPOs ? VPOs are recruited among candidates who are recommended by local people. Generally speaking VPOs are the people who are trusted in the community and occupied key position in local social networks. They have decent socio-economic status and good will to help neighbours. VPOs are the people who embody typical Japanese common sense and value sense as ordinary citizen. Consequently if an offender is evaluated badly or there exists some cognitive discrepancy between an offender and a VPO, it can be said that the offender might experience some difficulty to adjust himself into the local community. I made it just as rough frame of reference in analysis.
(4) Result Through this analysis two Axes of Category (Table 1 & 2 ), Centres of Gravity are extracted, and thus offenders are divided into four clusters.
Figure1: Map showing Gravity Centre of Cluster and Individual Distribution Axis I : Life history, conditions in the process of growth, Axis II : Insights on himself
3Discussion;Feature of Each Cluster of the Offenders 1) Offenders of Cluster I (24 / 130) • High evaluation by VPO for offender’s endevourof rehabilitation • Offender’s thinking and recognition for the society and himself are positive, reasonable and realistic. • Offenders recognize that there is correlation between offence and his problems in living. • Congruence between the offender’s recognition on his problem and those written in his case files.
But recognition of his risky situation for recidivism is not enough. Also 25% of the offenders have complaint for their sentence. → Two Possibilities • Learning how to play expected social role, • Making effort to rehabilitate themselves with appropriate recognition for their problems, but still under developing and cannot afford to recognize their risky situation for recidivism, and have not embodied self-control ways yet.
2)Offenders of Cluster II (68 / 130) • VPO’s modest evaluation for offender’s endevour of rehabilitation in spite of their hardship in childhood and/or poor achievement in occupation • Offender’s recognition on correlation between offence and their problems in living, which is almost same as the offenders of Cluster I • Positive self image and appropriate recognition for nature of his offence and its background • However, VPO’s worry about unstability of offender’s life and evaluation that offender should broaden their perspective as human beings
3)Offenders of Cluster III ( 25 / 130) • Majority is suspended prison sentence with probation supervision cases • Majority is dropout from high school education • Not small offenders have intellectual limitation • VPO’s worry about offender’s future life and evaluation that strong and comprehensive support and supervision are necessary for the offender • Luck of offender’s recognition for nature of the offence andresponsibility for the offence
4)Offenders of Cluster IV ( 13 / 130 ) • Lack of recognition on cause of offence, problems of his life, impact/damage for victims and risk for recidivism 5)Common Features of Offenders of All Clusters • Lack of recognition for his own risky situation for recidivism (49.2%of all the Offenders) • Correlation among lack of offender’ s recognition of offence cause, problems in his life and impact/damage for victims →Problems in insights for the offence and himself are correlated.
4 Qualitative Research 1) Purpose In order to search for facilitating factors of rehabilitation and their problem solving ways in details, I interviewed 10 Offenders, who have no recidivism more than 10 years.
2) Methods • To Conduct semi-structured 2 hours interviews for 10 ex-inmates of one halfway house • To hear their life history, financing and housing, relationship, living situation, difficulty and task, hope and pleasure, life plan, thoughts for Criminal Justice System, etc. • The ex-inmates have multiple criminal histories or committed serious offence • To conduct follow-up interview for 5 offenders among them after 2 years’interval • To analyze the result with the Grounded Theory
3) Result Common Rehabilitation Factors of the 10 ex-offenders are as follows; • Accepting sentence/responsibility for the crime, • Positive reframing of prison life as good opportunity to “reset” his chaotic life, • Insight to causes of the offence, which surely (!) exists in his daily life, • Positive experience in prison work or vocational training to get high evaluation from prison officers and self confidence, • Realistic understandings of his life circumstance and his present capacity for living, • Positive self evaluation for their own endevour to rebuild his life and thus have hope to their future. • “Desistence is to live pleasant and self-reliant life!”
5 Conclusion • None of offenders in the survey commit another offence after the sentence and have motivation for rehabilitation. But their rehabilitation process isnot smooth. They need practical and emotional support for rehabilitation. To get realistic sense for life and problem solving skill are crucial for their rehabilitation. • They also need hope, dream and positive self-image. These needs are all social construction, which are developed through social interaction!
* Features of VPO • Fellow Resident of the Local Community • Taking Key Position in the Social Capital in the Local Community →Thus they can support offenders responding to their rehabilitation needs. • To facilitate/help offenders to access local resources • To help community and offenders to have relationship with mutual understanding
6 Safe Guard to Make Use of VPOs’ Advantage • To Clarify Responsibility of the State —Case management including risk management is responsibility of the State • To establish safe guard to secure mental and physical safety of VPOs • To institute training system and providing VPOs with up to date information on the treatment of offenders • To institute of symbolic appraise system to answer to the good will and contribution by VPOs